Profile

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Not just part of a great line on Glee, Tinker Tailor Solider Spy is also (first, primarily, mainly) a novel by John le Carre. A novel that was made into a mini series (in 1979) and, last year, a feature film starring Gary Oldham, Colin Firth, and Benedict Cumberbatch.

While Tinker Tailor Solider Spy has been known by the same name in all three incarnations, the novel's author is known by a different name quite often; John le Carre is the pseudonym of David John Moore Cornwell.

He's not - by far - the only author to use a pseudonym, though. To go with the movie's release on March 20th, here's a feature that I got from Think Jam which is helping promote the movie (and since I thought it was lots of fun, I'm posting it!):

AVAILABLE MARCH 20, 2012 ON

BLU-RAY™ COMBO PACK WITH UltraViolet™, ON
DVD AND ON-DEMAND

FROM UNIVERSAL STUDIOS HOME ENTERTAINMENT

TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY: Also Known As…

Things
aren’t always as they seem in the Oscar®-nominated, suspenseful, and
stylish thriller from director Tomas Alfredson (Let the Right One In), based on the classic novel by John le Carré.
At the height of the Cold War, Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service (SIS),
a.k.a. MI6 and code-named the Circus, has been compromised. An ever-watchful former top lieutenant and
career spy, George Smiley (Gary Oldman,
The Dark Knight, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix ), is called out
of retirement by the government to help identify and track a suspected mole at
the top of the agency. The list of
suspects is narrowed to five men. Even
before the startling truth is revealed, the emotional and physical tolls on the
players enmeshed in the deadly international spy game will escalate…

Tinker Tailor
Soldier Spy author may be
known to his readers as his pen name John le Carre but he was born as David John Moore Cornwell. During the 1950s and 60s, he worked for the
British Intellgience and thus began writing under the pseudonym “John le
Carre.” In celebration of Tinker Tailor
Soilder Spy’s DVD, Blu-ray and On-Demand release, we will look at other
famous authors who have been known solely by their pen names, including Mark
Twain, Lemony Snicket and Dr. Seuss.

MARK TWAIN

Born on November 30, 1835, Samuel Langhorne is best known
for writing American classics such as The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer and its sequel
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn under the pen name of Mark Twain. Twain used
different pen names before he settled on “Mark Twain.” The name derives from his history of working
on Mississippi riverboats and the expression “by the mark twain” which means
the water is 12 feet deep and it is safe for riverboats to pass.

LEMONY SNICKET

Lemony Snicket is an American novelist best known for
writing and appearing as a character in A
Series of Unfortunate Events. Born
as Daniel Handler, Handler invented the name “Lemony Snicket” after researching
for this first book The Basic Eight. Handler wanted to receive material from
organizations that he found “offensive or funny” but didn’t want to attach his
real name to. The name’s similarity to
Jiminy Cricket is no coincidence as Handler saw him “overly moralistic cheerful narrator who he
despised.” When writing A Series of Unfortunate Events, Handler,
along with his editor, thought the books should be published under that
character’s name, instead of his.

DR. SEUSS

Theodor Seuss Geisel, or better known as Dr. Seuss, was
an American writer, poet and cartoonist who wrote numerous children’s
books. During his lifetime, he published
46 children’s books, which often include imaginative characters and frequently
used trisyllabic meter. Though he often
used Dr. Seuss as his pseudonym, he also used Theo LeSieg for books that he
wrote but was illustrated by others. In
one instance, he used the pen name of Rosetta Stone.

AYN RAND

Ayn Rand was born as Alisa Zinov’yevna Rosenbaum on
February 2, 1905. A Russian-American
novelist, philosopher, playwright and screenwriter, she is best known for her
two novels The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged. She also developed her own philosophical system,
which she called Objectivism and after Atlas
Shrugged, she turned to nonfiction writing by publishing her own magazines
and essays that promoted her philosophy.
Rand was an advocate of reason as the only means of acquiring knowledge
and rejected all forms for faith and religion.

GEORGE ORWELL

Eric Arthur Blair was best known under his pen name
George Orwell. A 20th century English
novelist and journalist, Orwell’s better known for two of his dystopian novels
– Nineteen Eighty-Four and Animal Farm. Blair derived his pen name for his love of
the River Orwell, which flows through Suffolk County in England.

I knew about Dr. Seuss and Lemony Snicket (for sure after reading Handler's book Why We Broke Up). I think I knew that the others - maybe not Orwell, though - were pen names, but I don't think I knew their real names so this was fun!

The Bronte sisters also had pen names (Anne was Acton, Emily was Ellis and Charlotte was Currer Bell) as did however many authors, etc that I'm either forgetting or don't know about yet.!

TFIOS Ambassador

Mini Disclaimer

All books will receive fair and honest reviews whether they were sent to me by a publisher, author, publicist, review site for review or I acquired them myself. No compensation is received in exchange for my reviews, opinions are my own.

If a book was sent to me - for review, blog tour, or otherwise - the source of that book will be noted at the end of my review.

This is disclosed, by me, in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255, Guides Concerning Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.